Why You Shouldn’t Start a Skool Community
For People Who Want Income Without an Audience
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Phil Smy
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
You've been told to start a community. Here's why you shouldn't.
Everywhere you look, entrepreneurs are launching Skool communities, membership sites, and online groups. The promise is compelling: recurring revenue, audience ownership, leverage, and freedom.
But for many people, communities become a quiet trap—not because they fail, but because they succeed in exactly the wrong way.
This book is for the person who feels resistance to starting a community but can't explain why.
Inside, you'll discover:
- Why communities aren't products—they're ongoing emotional obligations that require constant presence
- How "recurring revenue" becomes "recurring depletion" for autonomy-minded entrepreneurs
- The hidden cost structure no one talks about: attention fragmentation, emotional labor, and performance requirements
- Why smart, capable people fall for the community trap (and how the advice selects for the wrong personality types)
- A simple decision framework to assess if you're actually suited for community-building
- 5+ alternative revenue models that generate income without requiring your constant presence
- How to build sustainable income without building an audience or platform
- What to do if you've already started a community and realized it's not working
This isn't an argument against communities. It's an argument against building a business model that works for everyone else but quietly erodes you.
If you value deep work over constant engagement, autonomy over maximum scale, and building a life that feels livable rather than impressive—this book will give you permission to choose differently and practical alternatives to pursue instead.
Perfect for: Solo entrepreneurs, consultants, coaches, creators, and anyone who's been told they "should" start a community but feels inexplicable resistance to the idea.
What you won't find: No upsells. No email sequences. No community to join (obviously). Just honest assessment, clear reasoning, and actionable alternatives.